Philanthropy
Taking Risks Out Of Philanthropy

We talk to law firm Farrer & Co and a lawyer working in the charities area about the kind of themes emerging in the philanthropy sector in the UK.
  A UK
  report, published in 2023, showed that people are
  increasingly using donor-advised funds as their primary
  philanthropic instrument, it highlighted that DAFs can
  mitigate the risks which a self-built charity
  might face, a legal expert says.
  
  The 2023 UK Donor-Advised Fund report, published by
  National Philanthropic Trust UK, found that contributions to DAFs
  have grown for a tenth year in a row. Grants from DAFs to
  charities rose by 21 per cent in 2022 to £554.7 million ($705.7
  million). That figure reflected a long-term trend in the growth
  of DAFs, the authors of the report said.
  
  “Running your own charitable foundation brings a lot of legal
  responsibilities,” James Maloney, partner at law
  firm Farrer &
  Co told this publication recently.
  
  DAFs are popular because they enable donors to outsource some of
  this [responsibility], he continued. “They [potential donors] can
  be surprised at how heavily regulated this sector now is.”
  
  As told to this news service by others, such as here, would-be
  philanthropists are increasingly interested in making an impact,
  rather than having names on the wall of a building or putting
  themselves into to the limelight. There is also a desire to
  “scale up” philanthropy and work with established charities,
  avoiding the need to add fresh cost layers and complexities.
  Examples include how UBS clients, for instance, can plug into the
  UBS
  Optimus Foundation and its roster of charitable/impact
  activities.
  
  Reputation
  Maloney, as perhaps one would expect from a lawyer well versed in
  the charities sector, knows that donors must guard
  reputations. 
  
  Philanthropists can become more prominent and attract attention,
  not all of which is positive. One way that people can seek to
  mitigate the focus on an individual is moving towards
  “place-based” philanthropy where the cause is linked to a
  particular community, Maloney said.
  
  Attitudes to the tax side of philanthropy are changing. “Some
  clients tell me `I don’t want anything that looks remotely as if
  I am trying to avoid tax.’”
  A big trend he sees is the blurring between the boundaries of
  business and philanthropy. For many HNW individuals, business
  owners and philanthropists, these areas are “less
  compartmentalised,” he continued. “Philanthropists are more
  strategic in how they give and they want to have more impact…this
  is not just about writing a cheque.”
  
  “People who are already making money by tracking measurable
  outcomes are attuned to this,” he said.
  
  Getting the balance right when a philanthropist is focused on
  results isn’t easy. 
  
  One of the tensions is the desire for philanthropists to have
  measurable results and for them to understand the long-term,
  patient commitment to a particular charitable mission. Some
  organisations don’t want donors placing certain restrictions on
  them. Another point to consider is that charities may not
  want to receive donations from certain businesses, such as those
  involved in fossil fuels, he said. 
  
  This refusal of donations can be controversial sometimes.
  Orlando Fraser, the chair of the Charity Commission,
  reported (9 November, Guardian) that it may
  intervene where trustees have rejected or returned donations
  simply because their “personal worldviews or preferences” were
  incompatible with those of the donor.
  
  Debates about climate change and the use of fossil fuels
  have been a touchy area, for example. A year ago, the Royal
  Opera House confirmed that it had ended its sponsorship
  relationship with BP after more than three decades. Climate
  activists have criticised the UK-listed energy firm for its
  sponsorship of the Science Museum.
The sometimes fraught political and cultural issues that can arise from philanthropy were explored by this news service following the recent publication of a book about the role of philanthropy advice in wealth management.